Sal Paradise wrote:
Economics is a massively complex area where equally competent experts will have polarised opinions
And yet an overwhelming majority of economists believe that Brexit will damage the UK economy, with estimates from between 2 to 9% of GDP; a small group advocating free trade have suggested the opposite, but their model has been exposed as fundamentally flawed.
The only people I can see who aren't polarised are rabid Brexiteers, who don't actually have any expertise; even David Davis has now admitted that the 'deal' he gets is likely to favour the EU, particularly when it comes to 'money and stuff.'
Given the absolute shambles of the negotiations, the exposing of so many lies during the campaign, and the increasing amount of information available to the public and MP's (only after the Government were forced to release the impact studies,) it seems to me that the only reasonable way forward is a 2nd vote on the deal itself; and that's before we mention the dark money scandal surrounding Farage and Aaron Banks that is just starting to emerge.
If the case for Brexit is so compelling, I can't see what Leavers would have to fear from that?